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Yale Students' Lawsuit Unmasks Anonymous Trolls

palegray.net writes "Two female Yale law school students have used the courts to ascertain the identities of otherwise anonymous posters to an Internet forum, with the intent of prosecuting them for hateful remarks left on the boards. At a minimum, the posters' future legal careers are certainly jeopardized by these events. While I'm not certainly not supporting or encouraging hateful speech online, these controversial actions hold potentially far-reaching consequences for Internet privacy policy and free speech." According to the linked Wired Law article, "The women themselves have gone silent, and their lawyers — two of whom are now themselves being sued — are not talking to the press."

50 of 668 comments (clear)

  1. :x by cushdan · · Score: 5, Funny

    I don't feel comfortable posting a comment.

    1. Re::x by SoundGuyNoise · · Score: 5, Funny

      You should have posted as Anonymous Coward.

      --
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  2. The posters deserve to be unmasked by mark2003 · · Score: 5, Informative

    This is not a free speech issue - the posters made threatening and offensive comments, inlcuding suggesting that they would assault/rape the female students.

    These comments would not be tolerated in any other setting so why should they be tolerated online?

    1. Re:The posters deserve to be unmasked by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Offensive speech is still free, so long as it is a matter of opinion and not fact. I can say 'John is a jerk' and be protected by the first amendment because it is not libel if it is my opinion of somebody. If I say 'John has herpes' (and he doesn't) that is libel because it's a demonstrable, objective state that can be proven to be untrue, rather than a difference of opinion. Threats aren't protected speech either. I don't know why this is a big deal, some people made threats and were given what they were due. I'd expect the same to be done to anybody who made threats. If it were just libel I might be more concerned, as the effects of libel on the internet are less clearly defined. Libel is more 'effective' between people in meatspace because of reasonable differences in the level of trust. I simply wouldn't trust every nasty rumor on the internet as a matter of what I would think of as common sense, but I might trust the same rumors from a close associate in person.

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    2. Re:The posters deserve to be unmasked by Ethanol-fueled · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There's a big difference between saying "So-and-so's business practices are suspect" and saying "So-and-so gave me herpes and I'm going to kill them."

      This wouldn't be too bad if potential employers and romantic interests weren't so damn nosey -- imagine kicking ass in a job interview for a good position only to discover that you were turned down because your psychotic, jealous ex with a lot of time on their hands gamed Google(or created a fake MySpace page) and made you out to be a drunk, zoophile, or worse!

      Dosen't matter if the incendiary posts were written by people called "HitlerHitlerHitler" and "GoatseFan1" -- the hiring manager may think, "Hmm, he/she sure does have a lot of enemies" or "I'd rather not have all that controversy attached to somebody who works for me." Same applies to potential romantic interests.

    3. Re:The posters deserve to be unmasked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I think this points to how anonymity is *usually* used for evil

      Really? C'mon... remember that next time you visit that medical web site to ask about that really embarrassing rash. You might want to be anonymous when inquiring about your options on terminating an unwanted pregnancy. You might also enjoy the anonymity when you visit those pr0n sites, when you criticize Scientology, when you're playing Unreal instead of working, when you visit that atheism web-site. When you bare your soul at an AA-type forum, you might not want your name on there. Or maybe you're blowing the whistle on your company's poisoning your town by publishing incriminating documents...

      Anonymity on the Internet certainly has its downside, but I think it's one of the major features for why MANY millions of people use the Internet in the first place-- it can is a liberating, empowering experience to participate in open forums, chat rooms, etc. without fear of personal consequence. Yes, people say things that they would not say otherwise including libelous accusations and even threats... but I think the upside FAR outweighs the downside.

      Posted anonymously, of course.

    4. Re:The posters deserve to be unmasked by HappySmileMan · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think this points to how anonymity is *usually* used for evil, instead of good like most geeks think about it.

      One lawsuit can't prove that something is "usually" true or false. What it shows is that in at least 2 cases (one for each of the trolls) anonymity is used for evil. You need a lot more than 2 cases to say that the majority of anonymous people on the internet are using it for evil

    5. Re:The posters deserve to be unmasked by Hyppy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It's your right to be offensive. There are no laws against that.

      It's my right to sue you for offending me. There are no laws against that, either.

    6. Re:The posters deserve to be unmasked by keithjr · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I saw this more as a Clear and Present Danger argument, although I am not sure if that is how it was presented. Yelling "fire" in a crowded theater, and so forth. Threatening to rape and murder a classmate is a pretty good way to have ones privacy justifiably suspended to ensure the safety of those threatened.

      People just need to learn that just because you said it on the internet doesn't mean the statement carries no weight.

  3. Technicality? by Lord+Ender · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Hateful speech is not illegal. False claims that substantially harm a person ARE illegal under slander/libel law. This law applies whether the comments are online or on the playground.

    --
    A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    1. Re:Technicality? by abscissa · · Score: 4, Informative

      Of course, world-wide, we have different laws.

      Hateful speech is not illegal.

      See R. v. Keegstra. In Canada at least, you do not have an unlimited right to free speech, even if you are not targeting a specific person.

      tl,dr: Making hateful statements against a particular identifiable group is illegal in Canada.

    2. Re:Technicality? by Lord+Ender · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's for the court to decide.

      --
      A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    3. Re:Technicality? by DamnStupidElf · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Making hateful statements against a particular identifiable group is illegal in Canada.

      Does it depend on the group? Can I hate lawyers, politicians, and statisticians?

      What about pirates, Real Pirates (the board-a-ship-and-kill-people kind), rapists, serial killers, or nazis?

      All of those are pretty identifiable groups. Which ones can I explicitly say that I hate? I want to be sure I can get through customs next time...

    4. Re:Technicality? by p0tat03 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      From TFA:

      "I think I will sodomize her. Repeatedly"

      This particular quote does not fall under hate speech (the legality of which varies), but this is a clear threat to physically harm a person. In this case IMHO law enforcement have every right to ascertain the identity of the person so as to better protect his/her potential victims.

      If you're not an assclown, your identity on a forum is safe. Nobody is going to pursue your identity in court for calling them "shitface".

    5. Re:Technicality? by tinkerghost · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If you were one of 3 blond women in the 8:30 Legal Research class & had someone on the college message board repeatedly saying "I'm going to ass rape the blond bitch in my 8:30 Legal Research class", you would probably take it a bit more seriously than a whiny anime complaint. This wasn't "hey she's got nice tits", these were comments which started out as libel, labeling them 'whores who fucked their way into college', & progressed into threats when they took a stand against the libel.

      Libel isn't a protected form of speech under the constitution, neither are threats of physical or mental harm. Being anonymous is fine, using that anonymity to break the law and then whine when people try and find you is stupid.

      The guys who posted this crap were over the line, the admin should have handled it - he was a 3rd year law student and should have been able to see that it wasn't protected speech. His waving the 1st amendment flag here is an insult to it's purpose.

      I certainly won't lose any sleep over a bunch of frat boy jocks getting bitch slapped over their behavior.

  4. I don't know... by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is a pretty straightforward bit of libel...Even on the internets you have to be careful if you're explicitly slandering someone by name.

    Illegal is illegal, and if these monkeys were dumb enough to put up all this crap under handles that they accessed from their homes, then they're screwed, and it's hard to see how they ought not be.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    1. Re:I don't know... by Dekortage · · Score: 4, Informative

      From the article and the court documents it appears that the plaintiffs are both "Jane Doe"s. That means that their identity was not explicitly known to everyone (else the Jane Doe ploy makes no sense) and that it is the supposed attacker's identity which is being exposed instead.

      The article notes that "the Jane Doe plaintiffs contend that the postings about them became etched into the first page of search engine results on their names," which strongly suggests that the posts included their real names, not just their online handles. If so, then the Jane Doe thing is to further distance their names from the media and search engines.

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    2. Re:I don't know... by Dekortage · · Score: 5, Informative

      I realize I am breaking some kind of Slashdot rule here, but I've googled this further.

      On March 9, the Dean of Yale's law school wrote this: "The Washington Post ran a story about several of our students who have been personally targeted on an internet message board. While this message board purports to be about law school and law school admissions, it contains numerous sexist, racist, homophobic and other derogatory comments by anonymous posters. Some of these comments include the names and personal information of our students and other individuals, along with many false and hurtful assertions."

      Furthermore, their names are stated clearly in this PDF of Ciolli's lawsuit against the two women.

      --
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  5. hmm by nomadic · · Score: 4, Informative

    This will almost certainly keep them out of the state Bar for a long period of time if not indefinitely. Even legally protected speech can be grounds for denial of bar membership.

  6. Re:Someone fill me in here. by AKAImBatman · · Score: 4, Informative

    Keep reading. It gets worse:

    The AutoAdmit controversy began even before one of the women, identified in court documents as "Jane Doe I," started classes in the fall of 2005, the lawsuit alleges. Doe I was alerted in the summer to an AutoAdmit comment thread entitled "Stupid Bitch to Attend Law School." The thread included messages such as, "I think I will sodomize her. Repeatedly" and a reply claiming "she has herpes." The second woman, Jane Doe II, was similarly attacked beginning in January 2007.

    I'd say they have a reasonable case here.

  7. Re:Internets... by superbus1929 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The problem is... it is.

    Companies are going to great lengths to search for anything particularly incriminating on people that are applying for a job, and when you're starting out in a law firm - where your basically doing bitch work anyway, and your #1 job is fitting in - anything that they could find that could make a person look bad is going to be held against them. No one has any privacy left anymore, so things that used to get passed off as "kids being kids" have long-reaching consequences later in life. I cry for that.

    With all that said, no, I don't think that this case sets a good precedent. The fault here is anyone that would listen to anonymous slander and use it against the women in question for any reason.

    --
    Let's stop dilly-dallying and just change "-1: Overrated" to "-1: Disagree" or "-1: Doesn't Subscribe to Groupthink".
  8. Re:Internets... by DrLang21 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Considering that anonymous trolls have a tendancy to feed off of eachother, I would not be surprised if this whole case has the opposite of the desired effect. More anonymous trolls will probably blast them. If someone is going to seek damages for some absurd post by an anonymous troll, they should think hard about whether or not any real damage is being done.

    --
    I see the glass as full with a FoS of 2.
  9. Re:Internets... by $RANDOMLUSER · · Score: 5, Funny

    Sister Bernice always warned me that things were going to Go On My Permanent Record.

    --
    No folly is more costly than the folly of intolerant idealism. - Winston Churchill
  10. Per se libel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    > a reply claiming "she has herpes."

    That's per se libel so long as it counts as a "loathsome disease" and identifies a specific person. Which is, per my understanding, the case here.

    I thought these were law school students? They're screwed. They have no defense if they can prove who made comments like that.

  11. Re:Someone fill me in here. by AndersOSU · · Score: 4, Insightful

    seriously?

    Maybe because she doesn't want her name further associated with scurrilous rumors...

  12. Re:Internets... by Southpaw018 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So you can post whatever you want under the guise of anonymity, full stop? Free speech has never meant freedom from consequences. Forgetting that is a dire mistake to make.

    --
    ACs are modded -6. I don't read you, I don't mod you, I don't see you. Don't like it? Don't be a coward.
  13. Re:Internets... by mapsjanhere · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As long as the anonymous troll trolls with other anonymous trolls, everything is fine. These idiots were smearing the real names of future competitors in order to ruin their careers before they even have started.
    I personally can't wait until the top entry in google on their names will be "got sued by Jane Doe for defamation", together with a link to their highly professional statements. I'm sure it will greatly enhance their careers in the fast food industry.

    --
    I'm aging rapidly, I bought a new game and had no idea if my machine was good for it.
  14. Re:Supid girls by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 4, Informative
    You can't write whatever the fuck you want, sorry. You can't threaten to do bodily harm to someone. You can't slander/libel them. These are the rules. If it was just them saying "XYZ is a stupid **** and she's a horrible lawyer and I hate her and I hope she catches AIDS and dies" then I'd agree with you. Claiming she has herpes (unless she does, that wasn't spelled out in article and would slightly change my opinion on this particular) and saying he's going to rape her is a different ballpark.

    If he's allowed to say those things, then her father/brother/boyfriend should be allowed to brutally murder the AC to protect her from rape (he did say he'd rape her). We (society) afford you rights and place limits on those rights, in exchange we protect you from your fellow man. Them's the rules. "God" didn't give us any rights, your rights are, in practice, what society decides your rights are. Often I disagree with society, but not in this case.

  15. Re:Isn't there a matter of intent? by taustin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Granted, hate speech is a somewhat subjective issue,

    What body is going to decide what exactly is hate speech on the Internet?

    Oddly enough, there is a body whose job is to determine the facts on matters that are somewhat subjective, and alledged to be harmful. That body is called "a jury."

  16. Re:Internets... by mhall119 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No one has any privacy left anymore

    Privacy starts at home, kids. If you don't want a future employer seeing pictures of you drunk and naked at a frat party, don't put them on the internet!

    Seriously, the biggest privacy problem we have these days is people thinking that everything is private unless they explicitly make it public, but reality doesn't work that way. Nobody goes walking down the street naked, then claims their privacy was violated when people looked at them. Well, the internet is no different. If you want something on the internet kept private, you have to make it private, otherwise it's public.

    --
    http://www.mhall119.com
  17. Re:Supid girls by lysse · · Score: 4, Funny

    The net is virgin territory

    Well, it was. Now, of course, it's fucked...

  18. Damage to job prospects is real. by sampson7 · · Score: 5, Informative

    With respect, I disagree. Law firms, particularly "prestigious" corporate firms, are notoriously risk-averse and likely would not hire someone who had "achieved" net notoriety, no matter how smart or otherwise qualified. I would assume that most potential hires are vetted at the least through a google search, if not a more detailed Lexis investigation.

    If you were a blue chip firm, would you take the risk of hiring one of these women? Imagine your multi-million dollar client does a search on your new associate's name -- even just looking for phone number -- and comes up with a sordid sex story instead. Wow.... there's a real risk that you have just damaged the relationship with that client. Just as one example -- look at the Department of Justice's search on potential attorney hires. Now the DOJ was illegally considering political affiliation, not net fame, but the principle is the same: defamatory net stories would likely have prohibited these women from being considered.

    That big firms are risk averse is hardly surprising. In fact, risk-aversion/paranoia is what -- in theory anyway -- is what makes an $x00 an hour lawyer worth paying for.

    Note: this is also why I left a wanna-be big firm after a couple years. Who wants to work in an environment like that? But certaintly these women have the right to experience the hell of Big Firm life for themselves, and should not have had their careers permanently damaged because of a couple of idiots decided to slander them for fun.

  19. Think bombs by fuliginous · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you leave a bomb anonymously we'd all want you tracked.

    Both hate speech and the bomb are an attack. So why not, freedom of speech shouldn't really enter into it unless what is said is true.

    So if they posted something true as a judge that would be my requirement. Show me that it is a lie in which case I'll pass the order to bring them to be held accountable. Otherwise if it is truth well pants you can't sue over the truth (can you?)

    Besides when was it freedom of anonymous speech?

  20. Re:Internets... by computational+super · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Actually, yes, freedom of speech DOES and always has meant freedom from consequences. After all, if it doesn't, then what's the opposite? What is "restricted speech" if free speech can mean anything from "you're free to say it, but you may get fired for saying it" right up to, "you're free to say it, but you may be executed by firing squad". Does "restricted speech" mean going around and cutting out people's tongues and chopping off their hands before they say something that might be banned?

    Where you're confused is thinking that we actually have or ever had free speech. We're (in America, at least) supposed to be free from governmental consequences, but even that comes with a load of (all stupid) exceptions.

    --
    Proud neuron in the Slashdot hivemind since 2002.
  21. Re:Internets... by King_TJ · · Score: 4, Informative

    This has never been true with using "anonymous forums" on the Internet, really.

    For example, someone just recently commented on Craigslist's "Rants & Raves" forum how his brother was paid a visit by "Homeland Security" here in the USA, because he had posted an anonymous comment advocating the shooting of the current president.

    Anonymous message forums I've seen and used never gave me a written guarantee that my identity would never be subject to being uncovered if I posted there. They merely function anonymous as a matter of "general practice", subject to the prevailing laws of the land.

    IMHO, anyone posting hate speech or directly attacking people by name on an "anonymous" forum should be aware that they better use methods of their own to ensure they can't be traced back by IP address to their whereabouts. Relying on the forum to "shield" them from the law is a risky bet, at best.

  22. Thomas Jefferson's advice on use of the Internet by smilindog2000 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Whenever you do a thing, act as if all the world were watching."

    --
    Beer is proof that God loves us, and wants us to be happy.
  23. Re:Not disagreeing, but... by Hektor_Troy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    On the other hand, if we assume the situation is analogous, the implication is that, should someone say to me in the middle of an online game, "I'm going to rape you," I should be able to compel their identity from Microsoft or whoever if I "feel threatened."

    I'm not sure those two are analogous. Without having reread the case, I seem to recall that the women in question did not seek out the forums in question. Their pictures were put on the board, and then the comments started flying. When they then joined the board, (again, afair) seeking to have the pictures removed, they were then subject to even harsher comments, including the rape ones.

    You, on the other hand, have joined the game yourself, and aditionally you have joined the chat, which is an optional extra, of your own volition. Aditionally, while "I'm going to rape you" might be a breach of conduct on Xbox Live (I don't know if this is the case), in most fps' this is the 'norm' where you attempt to psyche out your opponent. No adult of a reasonable mind will expect the speaker to seek out your address (is this even possible through Xbox Live?) and hunt you down.

    However, on this board, not only were the women's pictures posted, their names and addresses were posted, and considering the vitriol spewed forth on the boards, even I, being a VERY common sense kind of guy, would not put it beyond the assholes and idiots* on the boards to actually following through on their threats**

    Of course, I'm not in any way, shape or form a lawyer or had any law training. Hell, I'm not even from the US.

    * In my humble and non-medical/-psychological opinion, since I am not refering to mental retardation
    ** Considering the writing, the constant agitation by the other posters etc, I do not consider the comments "innocent", "joking", "ironic", "sarcastic" or even "humourous"

    Just as important - the court found in favour of the plaintiffs, so obviously the judge (jury?) found the threats to be credible and the derogatory comments to be libel. If you do not like that ruling, you need to write your congressmen and tell them why. Don't email, don't fax. Send them a physical letter, preferably handwritten. At least that's what the usual comments on the subject around here advices.

    --
    We do not live in the 21st century. We live in the 20 second century.
  24. Re:Internets... by Hektor_Troy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm sure it will greatly enhance their careers in the fast food industry.

    Well, I'm sure the day will come that even fast food joints will check up on their applicants. Just how many places do you think will want to hire someone to work alongside women and serve food to women, when they have repeatedly not only shown themselves to be womenhaters, but actively threatened to rape them repeatedly in the ass?

    My guess is "not many".

    --
    We do not live in the 21st century. We live in the 20 second century.
  25. Re:Internets... by BitterOak · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you don't want a future employer seeing pictures of you drunk and naked at a frat party, don't put them on the internet!

    And what's to stop someone else from posting that pic of you drunk and naked at the frat party?

    --
    If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
  26. Re:Not disagreeing, but... by Win0ver · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Normally I would agree with you, but you are misinformed about what really happened (I admit the article doesn't say much).

    This story has been on slashdot a few times. Here's what really happened, if I remember correctly:

    - Guys posts pictures of women and comment on the forum (she's a 9! she's a 4! such a bitch i'd rape her! etc.)
    - Women ask site owner to remove pictures and offending comments
    - Site owner laughs at them, and informs posters that the women in question asked for the pictures to be removed
    - Guys don't like it ; they literally start stalking these girls, take more pictures of them (at the gym?), and start posting threats.
    - Women sue.

    Read this again. These girls got stalked and threatened. I don't care if it's on the internet or elsewhere ; when someone stalks you, takes pictures, and threatens to assault and rape you, it is wrong, and these women have a case. The whole thing about it affecting their career etc was only true at the beginning (the first pictures and comments posted). This thing got a lot more serious afterwards.

  27. Re:Internets... by Sancho · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Anonymity can be used to prevent otherwise unlawful repercussions. It doesn't much matter that Congress makes no law if the moment you blow the whistle on the local police department, you get indefinitely harassed with bogus, trumped up charges.

    Anonymity can be an important part of free speech. The line between it being necessary and harassment is very fine, indeed. Usually, it depends upon who the speaker is talking about.

    In order to claim slander, there are two prerequisites: first, the allegations must be false, second, someone must believe the allegations to be true. Unless they can prove there is someone somewhere stupid enough to believe in anonymous posts they read on the internet, there are no consequences to that trolling.

    That's oversimplifying to a huge degree.

    First of all, there are slightly different laws in different states. I'm not sure what the laws in this case are. If they are as you say, then fine, ignore the rest of this post.

    A defamation claim can be made for just about any reason. If someone says something negative about you, you can take them to court for it. You've laid out the common defenses to a defamation claim--if it's the truth, in the US, you'll probably lose the case. If it's not true, generally, you have to prove that there was malicious intent. Believability is only one aspect of malicious intent. A statement could be slanderous without being believable ("Jane Doe kills puppies for Satan!"). Of course, if you are a celebrity, you have a higher burden of proof. Now, the alleged slanderer must have knowingly lied. If the guy heard from another guy that I (a celebrity) fucked a goat, and they publish it, I probably won't win the suit.

    One of the most common defenses against such suits is that the person was stating an opinion. That's a whole separate can of worms. It's all really quite complicated.

    In this case, it sounds like the trolls were making statements with the intent to defame competition, so that the trolls would get opportunities that these Jane Does would otherwise have received. I have no doubt that the Janes will win, unless the trolls made it quite clear that they were expressing opinion, and weren't attempting to state facts about the Janes.

  28. Re:Internets... by I'm+not+really+here · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Problem with this statement "Don't put them on the internet" is this - many of these photos on the internet were not posted by the individual claiming a desire for privacy.

    Facebook is a horrifying example of this. I have a friend who's facebook photos are nice and clean and show him as he (99% of the time) is. Shown right below that are the 300+ photos in which friends have tagged his face in so that people know they are of him. So... the 1% of his life in the last 3 years in which he made mistakes and did things that look ridiculous (wearing a bra on a dare, that type of stuff), are now plastered on the internet, and he cannot do anything about it.

    So... yes, true privacy is dead. Long live the False Sense of Privacy.

    --
    Before commenting on the Bible, please read it first
  29. Re:blaming the wrong person by Mistshadow2k4 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Huh? Okay, let's do a little experiment here. You must have a female relative or acquaintance somewhere who can get online. Now, send her an email or post on a forum she visits a lot of insults and threaten to assault/rape her. Indicate that you know who she is in real life. See how she reacts.

    Now, try to imagine how you'd feel if exactly that happened to a woman you happen to care about, like, say, your mom or a sister. "Idle threats"? Sure, a threat to rape your mom or sister might be idle, but I'd bet you'd take it seriously. I know that if it were me and I found out who he was, I'd want his ass in jail for threatening me with bodily harm. It's little different from a guy calling you and telling you he's coming to your house to rape you. Simply put, it's not a matter of childish threats. It would be pretty damn scary, in fact.

    Christ, the number of guys here defending these guys rights to threaten women online makes me wonder how many wannabe-rapists there are on slashdot. If I ever meet any of you in real life, keep in mind that I'm a redneck from the southern US and I will shoot you if you try anything. Yeah, we get a little upset when rape threats start flying around. What did you expect, them (or me) to just giggle and ask if we can get you another beer? Jesus.

    --
    I dream of a better world... one in which chickens can cross roads without their motives being questioned.
  30. Re:Slashdot sucks by tinkerghost · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Before you mod me flamebait, consider the implications of such an action. Ordinarily, on the internet, people are able to ignore the trolls.

    AC's name is Dave Bubbleshits & he lives over in the blue house behind the college. He's a dumb bitch-ho who should be raped daily.

    There's a huge difference between anonymous flamebait directed at other anonymous people. These guys weren't directing it that way. They were giving specifics, in some cases names. This wasn't your normal trolling, this was cyberstalking & cyberbullying at it's worst. Done in person, it would be bad enough, but 4 years later, those comments are still the first thing anyone - including a prospective employer - sees when they Google these women's names. A libel is definitely called for here.

  31. Re:Internets... by camg188 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Which part of "Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech" you don't understand?

    Libel != freedom of speech.
    If you damage someone because you knowingly made false statements about them, they can sue for compensation of those damages.

  32. Re:Internets... by geekmux · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And what's to stop someone else from posting that pic of you drunk and naked at the frat party?

    Errr....I dunno, perhaps you taking charge for your own actions and not getting drunk and naked at a frat party?

    One thing we should have learned by now, damned cameras are everywhere. Either take responsibility for your own actions, or expect the inevitable to happen.

  33. This has nothing to do with privacy by DancesWithBlowTorch · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is not about privacy. It is also not, as the submitter wants us to think, about "Freedom of Speech".

    Freedom of speech is the right to say what you think if you don't thereby infringe on other people's higher valued rights (by committing libel). It's not the right to hide behind a false identity and make libelous claims.

    It is also not "privacy" to go out in public, use a fake name and yell something, independent of whether it's true or not.

    Privacy is the right to decide for yourself how much of the "things you don't do in public" becomes public (that's a vague definition, given).

    There is no reason to protect the identity of trolls. There is a reason to protect their right to say their honest opinion, however stupid it may be -- but not their wish to make libelous claims and go unpunished.

  34. Exactly... wrong by Theaetetus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't know the context of this "threat", not having read the forum in question

    There's your first problem - before passing judgment, it would be good to do at least a bit of cursory research.

    but what do these women do when someone says "Fuck you" to them at a party or driving a car? Do they go running for a lawyer? In both cases, the threat would be much more credible than some anonymous net poster.

    And there's your second problem - in spite of admitting that you've read nothing about this, including apparently the article, you're ready to make ad hominem attacks.

    On the off chance you read this, the grandparent poster was wrong - the threats were graphic and specific, listing the girls' names, photos, and class and gym schedules. That becomes a credible threat.

  35. Total 100% hypocrisy by lena_10326 · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Here's a time line:
    1. Anonymous posters libel Jane Doe 1 and 2 on the forum
    2. Website refuses to remove the comments on the grounds of freedom of speech
    3. Jane Doe 1 and 2 sue and discover the identities of the anonymous posters
    4. Jane Doe 1 and 2 sue anonymous posters, as well as add website administrator Ciolli to the suit
    5. Ciolli is later dropped on the grounds that ISPs and administrators cannot be held liable
    6. Ciolli sues Jane Doe 1 and 2 on the grounds of defamation

    Here's where the hypocrisy comes in.

    We know illegal felonious comments (threats of rape and murder) were allowed to remain posted on the website. We know the website administrators (including Ciolli) claim to have allowed those messages to remain posted in order to "protect" freedom of speech of the anonymous defendants. But why is freedom of speech OK in that case, but not OK when the Jane Does bring lawsuit against him? Was it because he suddenly found himself being dragged into the mix? Did he find out it was an awful thing having people making false accusations about him? Did he find out libel is NOT protected by freedom of speech after all?

    He got a taste of what it's like to be libeled, slandered, and defamed in a horrid way and then suddenly changed his tune. He wanted to deny the Jane Does the freedom of speech and their freedom to bring lawsuit, but he didn't appear to be concerned about the harm caused by the messages posted by the defendants.

    That's hypocrisy.

    --
    Camping on quad since 1996.
  36. Re:Internets... by murdocj · · Score: 4, Informative

    Of course a court can take action based on speech. What do you think happens in a defamation suit?